New Lenovo Yoga C740 (14-inch): A Great Macbook Air Alternative

Lenovo Yoga C740 Combining sleek design, long-lasting battery life, and high-speed processing, the Yoga C740 blazes a trail with the latest 10th generation Intel® Core™ processors. Furthering Yoga’s famous 2-in-1 versatility, the Yoga C740 is available in both 14” or 15.6” sizes, offering the clarity of up to a FHD VESA400 HDR display, Dolby Atmos™ speakers, and a webcam privacy shutter for safe and mobile entertainment.

A slim, all-metal 3-pound laptop with long battery life that’s a fine fit for office or school work.

Whenever someone asks me for a Windows alternative to the MacBook Air, my answer for more than a year has been either the Lenovo IdeaPad 730S or the two-in-one Yoga 730 generally because they cost less, but give you a similar look and feel and potentially better performance. They’re just great ultraportables for normal, everyday home office or school work and the Lenovo Yoga C740 is no different.

The C740, available in 14- and 15.6-inch sizes, is the update to the Yoga 730. It falls in the middle of the current Yoga two-in-one convertible lineup with the C940 above and 13.3-inch C640 below. The 15.6-inch C740 is essentially the same as the 14-inch I tested, but with a larger display and a keyboard with a number pad. My configuration lists for $870, but Lenovo regularly runs sales on it and, at the moment, it’s $730. A similar configuration is available in the UK for £681 and in Australia for AU$1,800.

Lenovo Yoga C740-14IML (14-inch)

Price as reviewed

$870

Display size/resolution

14-inch 1,920×1,080 touch display

CPU

1.6GHz Intel Core i5-10210U

Memory

8GB DDR4 2,666MHz (soldered)

Graphics

128MB Integrated Intel UHD Graphics

Storage

512GB SSD M.2 2280 PCIe NVMe

Networking

Intel 9560 802.11ac, Bluetooth 5.0

Operating system

Windows 10 Home 64-bit version 1903

New Lenovo Yoga C740 (14-inch): A Great Macbook Air Alternative

Less chin, more screen

At 3 pounds (1.4kg), the C740 is about a half pound heavier than its predecessor, but it also jumps from a 13.3-inch display to a 14-inch one. Oddly, though, their bodies are similar in size and the C740 is actually shorter because Lenovo eliminated much of the display’s bottom bezel.

The display itself has good color and brightness, though you’ll still have to see past reflections outside or under bright office lighting. The 720p webcam above the screen has one of Lenovo’s little sliding shutters that physically blocks the camera. And if you like using digital assistants, the C740 has far-field mics and Amazon Alexa support, too. You can access it even when you’re not actively using the laptop.

The C740 has a comfortable keyboard with two levels of backlighting and a smooth and responsive precision touchpad

Lenovo offers a few configurations of the C740 that include a choice of 10th-gen Core i5 or i7 processors (Comet Lake, not Ice Lake architecture), up to 16GB of memory, integrated UHD 630 graphics and up to 1TB SSD PCIe storage.

My configuration was perfect for typical work and entertainment use, and battery life was impressive at more than 11 hours on our streaming video test. You might want to get 16GB of memory to help with multitasking, though. The memory is soldered on, which means you can’t add more post-purchase. Storage, on the other hand, can be increased on your own easily enough.

Most people looking for a general-purpose laptop will be well served with the Yoga C740, even if you never intend to use it as a tablet. The display is pen-enabled, however, so if you decide you want to use it for casual sketches or note-taking, you’ll just need to pick up a pen.

On the other hand, if you know you want a pen, the C940, which starts at $1,250, comes with one and it has a storage and charging garage built into the laptop’s body. It also has Thunderbolt 3 support for its USB-C ports, whereas the C740 does not.

Sound is better on the C940 also, thanks to its soundbar hinge that delivers clear audio regardless of the screen position, and it has 802.11ax (Wi-Fi 6) wireless, which gives you a little futureproofing, assuming you haven’t already jumped to the latest wireless standard. Lastly, you can get it configured with a six-core Core i7 processor and an UHD (3,840×2,160 pixel) HDR 400 display.

Those are the main differences between the two and, for me, they’re things that are nice to have, but not necessities considering the price difference. With the Yoga C740, you’re still walking away with an excellent two-in-one for the money.